Reaching for the Clouds

Reaching for the Clouds

Albert Wenger, a partner at Union Square Ventures, says that the firm thought carefully about the competitive market before investing in 10gen. “We feel that [cloud computing] is a deep and profound shift in how computing is done, and it’s not going to play itself out overnight,” he says. Wenger adds that in light of that fact, he is particularly attracted to 10gen’s potential to start a community centered around building open-source infrastructure in the cloud. He envisions an open-source system that makes it easy for any individual to have access to the infrastructure that he needs to build a Web application, increasing the possibility that important Web applications will be built and distributed.

10gen has developed new technology for its system. Like BigTable and Amazon’s database, Mongo gets away from traditional relational databases, which Merriman says can have problems performing typical operations when data is stored on large numbers of machines. Instead, Mongo is an object database, meaning that information is organized around the objects being represented rather than around the relations between objects. Merriman says that this design works well with many of the programming languages used for Web design, which also encourage programmers to structure an application around objects.

The company has chosen to support an unconventional programming language. While Google App Engine supports Python, and many Web servers are programmed with Ruby or PHP, 10gen starts out supporting Javascript. While Javascript is commonly used to program clients (a client is the part of a desktop application located on a given person’s machine, and with which the user interacts), it’s relatively uncommon for the server. “We were thinking, ‘Forget what people are using today. What would be the ideal way to write Web applications?’” Merriman says. Since most companies write at least some of their code in Javascript, 10gen decided that it would make sense to write all the code in Javascript, and it started building the tools needed to support that. The company does plan to support other languages, including Ruby, which now works experimentally with the system.

Ray Valdes, a research director for Web services at Gartner, says that while he is intrigued by some aspects of 10gen’s approach, he’s skeptical. The company has some interesting hooks, he says, including the use of Javascript and the object database, but he adds that the database, in particular, faces fierce competition. Valdes also notes that the company’s promise to make its system open source is probably motivated in part by the need to prove stability to clients. “I think any small company in the platform business has to have an open-source angle, because it reduces the risk,” he says. Valdes says that 10gen is in a field crowded by startups, such as Heroku and KickApps, as well as by the giants. Only a few of these companies can ultimately survive, he says, and will probably try to establish niches.

10gen is still working on its business model, Merriman says, but he expects that the company will partner with hosting providers, layering its software over their hardware to make it easier for customers to set up and manage Web applications.